How does banning work?
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Steve Echols wrote:
I can say, every time I'm online, there's at least 8000-10000 other people online as well, so if you place an ad, it will definitely be "seen".
But is it the same 10,000 over and over, or is it all 3.5 million in rotation? Makes a difference in potential sales (1% of 3.5 million is 35,000 :); 1% of 10,000 is only 100, which won't even pay for the ads :().
Actually it depends on the time zone. I live in Europe. This means that all day I see Europeans on line. In the morning there are also a lot of Asian people and in the afternoon a lot of American people. There is rotation, but there are 'hardcore' CPians as well.
V. Stop smoking so you can: enjoy longer the money you save.
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In another thread (http://www.codeproject.com/script/comments/forums.asp?msg=1742657&forumid=2605#xx1742657xx[^]), someone named Christian Gauss threatened to talk to Chris someone about banning someone else from the site (perhaps Trollslayer, though I wasn't sure where the message was orignially hung). Does that work? Doesn't the offender just sign up with a new name and fake email a few minutes later?
Member #3507681 wrote:
Christian Gauss threatened to talk to Chris someone about banning someone else from the site (perhaps Trollslayer
Trollslayer? He wouldn't dare, those claws are sharp.
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Realistically, if you have questions about advertising, the people on the soapbox are not the people with the answers. Any site has it's hardcore regulars, it's lurkers, and it's occasional visitors. I'd say that CP is no different, when you see the number that's logged in, it will include me ( most of the time ) and lots of other regulars. The percentage of people online who are regulars is probably low, by definition.
Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog
Can't you be honest for once Christian? Just admit that it's, me, you, Chris and Nish running multiple accounts each, concurrently on multiple instances of IE. The total membership for CP is 5, us and the new bloke who somehow found his way in.
Michael Martin Australia "I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So I had to leave the place as soon as possible." - Mr.Prakash 24/04/2004
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In another thread (http://www.codeproject.com/script/comments/forums.asp?msg=1742657&forumid=2605#xx1742657xx[^]), someone named Christian Gauss threatened to talk to Chris someone about banning someone else from the site (perhaps Trollslayer, though I wasn't sure where the message was orignially hung). Does that work? Doesn't the offender just sign up with a new name and fake email a few minutes later?
Member #3507681 wrote:
Doesn't the offender just sign up with a new name and fake email a few minutes later?
Possibly, unless the person's IP address was banned. For folks with static IPs, this would be enough. For folks with dynamic IPs (e.g., dial-up), they would no doubt get a new one the next time they tried.
"Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed" - 2 Timothy 2:15
"Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb
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Do you really want answers to these questions, because this is the wrong place to ask it. Would you ask the people who make a car how it works, or the people who drive it ? Unique means that they are different users, with different user accounts, obvioulsy.
Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog
Christian Graus wrote:
Would you ask the people who make a car how it works...
I tried this once and the mfg. directed me to a local dealer. I told them I already went that route and I wanted someone who knew the car, not merely sold it.
"Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed" - 2 Timothy 2:15
"Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb
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In another thread (http://www.codeproject.com/script/comments/forums.asp?msg=1742657&forumid=2605#xx1742657xx[^]), someone named Christian Gauss threatened to talk to Chris someone about banning someone else from the site (perhaps Trollslayer, though I wasn't sure where the message was orignially hung). Does that work? Doesn't the offender just sign up with a new name and fake email a few minutes later?
Member #3507681 wrote:
How does banning work?
When an admin and a troll love eachoter very much.... ;P
Member #3507681 wrote:
Doesn't the offender just sign up with a new name and fake email a few minutes later?
Yes, and using a proxy if their IP was banned.
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So how many of the 3,508,376 members here are really members (ie, people I might be able to sell something to if I wrote and article and/or placed some ads)? I would think my product might appeal to, say, 1% of the membership (which would give me 35,083 sales), but I'm wary because the membership role has increased by 681 since I signed up this very afternoon, which seems like suspiciously rapid growth for an established site.
All members signed up. Your question is "how many are active" which then leads to the question "what is active". The better question is "How many readers does CodeProject have per month". And the answer is around 3 million unique readers a month. The membership numbers are accurate. We really do have than many people signing up.
cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP